The Future of an Illusion by Freud

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The Future of an Illusion by Freud

In his book The Future of An Illusion, Freud (1928) struggled to create a theory that

would distinguish morality from religion so that people would still be able to know right

from wrong even if they did not believe in a God. According to Freud, humans belonged

to civilization to control nature and to regulate human relations. However, Freud claimed

that humans have often paid a great price for civilization; this price, he believed, was

neurosis. Consequently, humans began to look for some kind of compensation to confront

the neurosis. Freud's theory maintained that religion often evolved as this compensation.

Freud suggested that religion and ethics, to this point, have acted to maintain civilization.

However, Freud also proposed that humans were helpless before the forces of nature and

thus "needed" something to protect them. Thus, he concluded that religion has sprung out

of helplessness and therefore was unhealthy to the individual. Based on this theory of

religion, Freud proposed the need to consider a way to sustain morality apart from

religion.

As is generally known, the central Freudian criticism of belief in God is that such a belief is

untrustworthy because of its psychological origin. That is, God is a projection of our own

intense, unconscious desires; He is a wish fulfillment derived from childish needs for

protection and security. Since these wishes are largely unconscious, any denial of such an

interpretation is to be given little credence. It should be noted that in developing this kind

of critique, Freud has raised the ad hominem argument to one of wide influence. It is in

The Future of an Illusion (1927, 1961) that Freud makes his position clearest:

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... thinking.

With both religion and science, it is not that the source determines the value of an idea - a

great idea can have a nonrational source, and a poor idea can have a rational source. What

is key is just how much influence that source continues to hold over the idea in question.

Scientists can and do come across revolutionary ideas intuitively, but their intuition and

wishful thinking are supposed to remain disciplined. Ideas are supposed to be open to

rational critique, demonstration and verification. Convictions, no matter how strong, must

be capable of being refined, modified and even abandoned if necessary. Scientific thinking

can thus be differentiated from religious thinking, since religion rarely if ever allows for

such an atmosphere to hold sway.

Works Cited

Freud, S. (1927/1961). The future of an illusion. New York: Norton.

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